INTERACTIVE SUPERCOMPUTING ACCELRATES CANCER RESEARCH.Interactive Supercomputing Inc.'s (ISC's) Star-P(TM) software is being used by scientists at the National Cancer Institute's (NCI's) Pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children. pe·di·at·ric adj. Of or relating to pediatrics. Oncology Branch to mine vast public databases of genomic information for potential new medical discoveries. With Star-P, scientists can now tap powerful high performance computers (HPCs) to dramatically accelerate the process of genomic profiling, which could yield new insights into the genetic risk factors for cancer, foster new procedures for testing tumors, or identify genetic changes that may result from treatments and therapies. Using a specialized software application called CORR CORR Used on the consolidated tape to indicate a correction in a reported transaction : CORR.LAST.GY 50 WAS 51. 4DB, researchers correlate one genomic array against a database of 100,000 probe pieces of a gene in search of specific DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. components or attributes. The correlations help them understand the relationship of genes, and their conclusions can provide the basis for additional genomic research. CORR4DB is developed in MATLAB (MATrix LABoratory) A programming language for technical computing from The MathWorks, Natick, MA (www.mathworks.com). Used for a wide variety of scientific and engineering calculations, especially for automatic control and signal processing, MATLAB runs on Windows, Mac and (R), a highly productive desktop tool favored by scientists. But sample sizes were growing into the tens of thousands of genomic arrays, overwhelming the capabilities of their desktop MATLAB environment and hindering interactivity with the data. Scientists knew that larger correlations could be completed faster if their calculation could be parallelized to run on a parallel HPC (Handheld PC) A palmtop computer that weighs less than one pound and runs specialized versions of popular applications. Microsoft coined the term for its Windows CE operating system, which is an abbreviated version of Windows. See Pocket PC. . "Running a single correlation on a desktop computer could take a week or more to complete," said Bill Strecker, chief technical officer at ISC (1) (Internet Systems Consortium, Redwood City, CA www.isc.org) An organization founded by Paul Vixie, Carl Malamud and Rick Adams in 1994 and later sponsored by UUNET and other Internet companies. . "An explosion in the amount of genomic data available to researchers has made their work increasingly difficult. Their tasks require more computing power, more system memory, and - all too often - more time. And in the race to understand how genetics and cancer are linked, time is precious." Star-P is an interactive parallel computing platform that lets NCI See Liberate. scientists continue to work with CORR4DB on their desktops, but run the correlations interactively on SGI (SGI, Sunnyvale, CA, www.sgi.com) A manufacturer of workstations and servers, founded in 1982 by Jim Clark. The company was founded as Silicon Graphics, Inc., but changed to its acronym in 1999. (R) Altix(R) servers. This eliminates the need to re-program the CORR4DB models in C, FORTRAN or MPI MPI - Message Passing Interface languages to run on the parallel computer. As a result, the answers to some researchers' questions are arriving up to 200 times faster than ever before. The Star-P approach has yielded significant advantages, said Dr. Mark Potts, president of HPC Applications, Inc., a consulting firm contracted to get NCI's software up and running on the SGI Altix. "If your goal is to take the same interactive environment and transfer it to a parallel processing system with a lot more memory, then you'll look for the easiest way to get there," said Potts. "NCI is accustomed to working in MATLAB and with certain formatted files, and the Star-P approach retains that environment." About Interactive Supercomputing Interactive Supercomputing (ISC) launched in 2004 to commercialize Star-P, an interactive parallel computing platform. With automatic parallelization and interactive execution of existing desktop simulation applications, Star-P merges two previously distinct environments - desktop computers and high performance servers - into one. Based in Waltham, Mass., the privately held company privately held company A firm whose shares are held within a relatively small circle of owners and are not traded publicly. markets Star-P for a range of biomedical, financial, and government laboratory research applications. For more information, call 781/419-5088 or visit http://www.interactivesupercomputing.com. |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion